World in Focus

October 7, 2013

Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images

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Protestors gather outside the headquarters of UK newspaper The Daily Mail in London, England, on October 6, 2013 to protest against recent articles regarding the father of Labour party leader Ed Miliband. A British newspaper apologised to opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband and suspended two journalists after it sent a reporter to a private family memorial service in a "terrible lapse of judgment" The Mail on Sunday's apology comes days after its sister newspaper the Daily Mail sparked uproar with an article in which it branded Miliband's dead father Ralph, a Marxist theorist, "The Man Who Hated Britain". AFP PHOTO/Leon NealLEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images

Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images

9of16

Protestors gather outside the headquarters of UK newspaper The Daily Mail in London, England, on October 6, 2013 to protest against recent articles regarding the father of Labour party leader Ed Miliband. A British newspaper apologised to opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband and suspended two journalists after it sent a reporter to a private family memorial service in a "terrible lapse of judgment" The Mail on Sunday's apology comes days after its sister newspaper the Daily Mail sparked uproar with an article in which it branded Miliband's dead father Ralph, a Marxist theorist, "The Man Who Hated Britain". AFP PHOTO/Leon NealLEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images